Kunming procurement meets Yunnan’s walnut groves
Sandry Law, Head of Procurement for Teamotea, spends weeks each season on the back roads of Yunnan, not only for tea but for the crafts that live alongside the leaf. When she first encountered a folding stool in a village near Lincang, she knew it belonged in a tea room. The stool’s maker, a retired woodworker named Li, had perfected the folding mechanism over decades of supplying itinerant tea traders. Sandry worked with Li to re-spec the height to exactly 30 cm — the same plane as a traditional meditation cushion — and to replace the original synthetic webbing with a densely woven cotton canvas sourced from a Kunming co-op. The walnut frames are cut from wind-felled trees in the hills north of Dali, air-dried for two years, then hand-joined without glue. The result is a seat that folds flat for storage, holds 120 kg without a creak, and feels as natural as bamboo under a chá pán. Each stool passes through Sandry’s quality check before it leaves the village, a quiet link between procurement rigor and the living traditions of the tea mountain.